The interest in Space programs keeps climbing on the African continent. Have you heard of the teenage girls from Cape Town working to launch a private satellite? In May, this private satellite is slated to launch.
Even more exciting is the Cubesat from Ghana that’ll go aboard the next Falcon 9 of SpaceX, scheduled to launch into space on the 9th of April, 2017, to join the International Space Station, from which the Cubesat will be deployed on its mission.
A CubeSat is a type of miniaturized satellite for space research usually of mass of no more than 1.33 kilograms per unit often built with commercial off-the-shelf components for their electronics and structure.
Dr. Julian Bennett of the All Nations University (ANU) College in Koforidua leads the team responsible for engineering the Cubesat. Julian Bennett is an aerospace engineer and a lecturer at the All Nations University, whose knowledge and experience in the field made him a great personality, to lead the project.
He is supported by Mr. Benjamin Bonsu, Ernest Matey, Joseph Quansah, and Aaron Yankey – all of the ANU.
After acquiring his Degree in Electrical Engineering from the KNUST, and a Master’s Degree in Aerospace Engineering from the Brunel University in London, Julian is now the lead on the Space Science Technology Laboratory (SSTL) project of the All Nations University, working with talented and dedicated students and colleagues, over the past 2 years in making the upcoming launch mission a reality.
The Cubesat
The All Nations University from Ghana, joined hands with Nigeria, Bangladesh, Mongolia and Japan to make this endeavor a reality, coming together as part of “BIRDS Project“.
The Cubesat, currently in the hands of the JAXA (Japan’s version of NASA), where much testing will happen, then eventually handed over to NASA to be put on board the upcoming Falcon 9 launch into space.
To help bring some of the engineers on board the ANU Space program team up to speed on this space ambition, some of the team members received training in Japan.
Space-related stuff isn’t that simple and involves research, trials, testing, and dedication. The fact that many of these team members used to be students of the ANU, but decided to cling onto the project to see it rolling eventually (pretty soon) is such a remarkable desire – a clear sign of how the love for Space has evolved that much into a driving force in recent years in Ghana.
Some of the Members of the BIRDS Project
Though the All Nations University doesn’t have a campus in Space, over the years, the institution, comprising of students from literally almost ‘All’ nations, has spent tens of thousands of dollars in pushing for research and engineering into their space program.
Before Julian joined a couple of years ago, the All Nations University had embarked on the launch of the CanSat back in 2013.
This experiment caught the attention of both scientific bodies, and media houses alike. The experience at the time, indeed was a motivation factor, for both students and lecturers involved in the space program at ANU to keep pushing, as a result, in just less than a month, the mission will be launched on the 9th of April in space and will join the International Space Station.